Vancouver Sun

Edward Herrmann often played FDR

Charismati­c actor was dad on Gilmore Girls

- EMILY LANGER

Edward Herrmann, a Tony and Emmy Award-winning actor who became known for his memorable portrayals of U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt and, more recently, for his role as the father on the TV series Gilmore Girls, died Wednesday at a hospital in New York City. He was 71.

The cause was brain cancer, said his son, Rory Herrmann.

At six-foot-five, and with a commanding, elegant voice, Herrmann was a charismati­c presence during his decadeslon­g career in the dramatic arts. To his early audiences, he was closely identified with the character of FDR, the president who overcame polio as a young man and led the United States through the Depression and much of the Second World War.

He played FDR in Eleanor and Franklin, a 1976 TV movie based on Joseph P. Lash’s Pulitzer Prize-winning book and co-starring Jane Alexander as Eleanor Roosevelt. The actors appeared together again in Eleanor and Franklin: The White House Years, a 1977 sequel.

“He was such a private man — even more private than Eleanor,” Herrmann said of FDR in a 1977 interview. “The role is really quite difficult. I have not tried to imitate him, but I can suggest him.”

Herrmann said he studied hundreds of hours of recordings of the president. A particular challenge, he said, was learning FDR’s gait before he contracted polio. The actor said he relied on 30 seconds of film from 1920 that showed Roosevelt stepping off a porch and shaking hands.

Herrmann played the president again in the 1982 film version of the musical Annie, directed by John Huston and featuring Aileen Quinn as the endearing orphan girl.

On the stage, Herrmann received a Tony Award for his performanc­e in a 1976 production of George Bernard Shaw’s play Mrs. Warren’s Profession opposite Lynn Redgrave as the heroine Vivie Warren. He was nominated for a Tony for his 1983 role in David Hare’s play Plenty as a diplomat in postwar Europe.

On the screen, Herrmann’s early parts included a performanc­e with Timothy Bottoms as a law student in The Paper Chase (1973) and as the freeloadin­g Klipspring­er in The Great Gatsby (1974), starring Robert Redford and Mia Farrow.

Later, his varied roles included a vampire in the horror movie The Lost Boys (1987); Richard Rich Sr. in Richie Rich (1994), with Macaulay Culkin; Nelson Rockefelle­r in Nixon, Oliver Stone’s 1995 film starring Anthony Hopkins; the newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst in director Peter Bogdanovic­h’s The Cat’s Meow (2001); and the film censor Joseph Breen in The Aviator (2004), featuring Leonardo DiCaprio as Howard Hughes.

As a television actor, Herrmann received an Emmy

The role is really quite difficult. I have not tried to imitate him, but I can suggest him. EDWARD HERRMANN ON PORTRAYING FDR

Award in 1999 for his performanc­e as Anderson Pearson on the legal drama The Practice. He also appeared in other series, including St. Elsewhere, Oz, Grey’s Anatomy and How I Met Your Mother.

On Gilmore Girls, which ran from 2000 to 2007 and starred Lauren Graham and Alexis Bledel, he played a father navigating his relationsh­ip with a daughter who becomes a single mother.

Edward Kirk Herrmann was born July 21, 1943, in Washington and grew up in Grosse Pointe, Mich., where his father was an engineer in the automotive and rail industries. He received an English degree from Bucknell University in Lewisburg, Penn., in 1965 before studying at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, where he cultivated a passion for British literature.

“With Shakespear­e, you sort of erase yourself and let the character inhabit you, and from there all the complexity will come,” Herrmann, who appeared as Cassius in a 1988 New York production of Julius Caesar with Al Pacino and Martin Sheen, said in 2003. “With many films and television scripts, you have to add the complexity yourself.”

Herrmann’s voice was easily recognizab­le to viewers of the History Channel and PBS, for which he often narrated documentar­ies. He was the voice of Franklin Roosevelt in Ken Burns’ seven-part 2014 series The Roosevelts: An Intimate History.

Herrmann’s first marriage, to actress Leigh Curran, ended in divorce. Survivors include his wife of two decades, Star Hayner Herrmann of Salisbury, Conn.; three children from his second marriage, Rory Herrmann of Los Angeles, Ryen Herrmann of Washington and Emma Herrmann of New York City; a brother; and a granddaugh­ter.

 ?? ANDREW H. WALKER/GETTY IMAGE ?? Stage, film and television actor Edward Herrmann, 71, died of cancer Wednesday in a New York area hospital.
ANDREW H. WALKER/GETTY IMAGE Stage, film and television actor Edward Herrmann, 71, died of cancer Wednesday in a New York area hospital.

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